Title: INVESTIGATING SKILLS AND VOCATIONAL TRAINING DEMAND IN ROMANIA
1INVESTIGATING SKILLS AND VOCATIONAL TRAINING
DEMAND IN ROMANIA
- A presentation by Dr. Catalin GHINARARU
- NATIONAL LABOR RESEARCH INSTITUTE
- (N.L.R.I.)
- R O M A N I A
2THE ROMANIAN TRANSITION FROM PLAN TO MARKET AND
THE EVOLUTION OF THE SKILLS AND TRAINING DEMAND
IDENTIFICATION SYSTEM
- First phase of transition-chaotic restructuring
and no skills and training identification system - Second phase of transition introduction of deep
structural reforms and the emergence of skills
and training demand identification systems - End of transition preparation for the EU
Accession and the beginning of consolidation the
skills and training demand identification systems
3First phase of the transition1989/90-1996
- Chaotic restructuring of the economy and a sharp
in output - Partial liberalization of prices
- High inflation and short-lived, non-sustainable
growth
- Emergence of private training providers, focusing
on general skills (IT, foreign languages,
accounting) - Dissolution of the state vocational-training
system - Exploration of different approaches for the
establishment of a system for the identification
of skills and training demand
4FIRST ATTEMPTS TO IDENTIFY THE DEMAND FOR SKILLS
AND TRAINING
- As early as 1994-95, a first version of the new
Occupational Classification Handbook has been
elaborated and the Council for Occupational
Standards established - Identification of demand for skills based solely
on macro-models, starting from the labor supply
side characteristics, with little inputs from the
demand side - Identification of training demand, based on
anecdotal evidence from the market as well as on
findings of sector based studies - First attempts made to establish a National Adult
Training Authority - No comprehensive overview and no strategic
perspective Little or no cooperation in between
the Ministries of Labor and Education
5Early researches and studies on the demand for
skills and training
- In between 1992-93 and subsequently in between
1995-96, a joint approach has been taken by the
trade unions and the employers in the
metallurgical industry to identify the need for
new skills as well as to trace skills that were
obsolete and to formulate a strategy for
vocational training for the sector - The evaluation was based on a survey undertaken
in all the major industrial sites of the sector
at the time. It was based on questionnaires and
interviews which tried to highlight training
needs of the workers as well as to trace economic
perspectives from the point of view of the
managers. In the end, the research, attempted to
link in between the findings of the two
instruments and thus to identify the demand for
skills as well as the training and re-training
needs in the sector. Little was made out of this
initiative as structural reforms that ensued, led
to a massive restructuring and in certain cases
to the all-out closure of some of the companies
surveyed - Meanwhile, similar approach has been tried by
the National Labor Research Institute at a mining
company as a part of preparing social
restructuring plans
6SECOND PHASE OF THE TRANSITION(1997-2000)
- Implementation of deep structural reforms
- Full price liberalization and massive
restructuring of state industry - Consolidation of economic fundamentals,
attainment of the critical mass of progress in
transition (1997-98) - Breakthrough in enterprise and banks
privatization (1997-2000) - Formal invitation to start EU Accession talks
(Dec.1999)
- Gradual-build-up of the institutional framework
of the labor market (Employment
Agency-1999,National Adult Training Board-late
2000) - First Phare VET project
- Demand identification systems for skills and
training focus on services for the dislocated
workers as a result of massive lay offs - First attempts to evaluate skills and training
demand on a national base
7EVALUATION OF SKILLS AND TRAINING DEMAND IN THE
SECOND PHASE OF TRANSITION
- Evaluation of skills and training demand for
active employment measures. Quantitative and
qualitative analysis employed at local and
regional level, as a background for the
implementation of training and assistance for the
dislocated workers (1997-99) - Evaluation of the nationwide demand for skills
and training employing only quantitative methods,
developed by the National Labor Research
Institute (1998-99) - Early phase of restructuring meant that no clear
perspectives were yet in sight, efforts
concentrating on macro-economic stabilization and
mitigating the social effects of mass lay-offs - First attempt at exploring demand for skills and
training from the perspective of the private
training providers, undertaken by Dr. C.
Ghinararu as part of an active-employment
measures program (1999)
8Methodology in a nutshell first attempts at
identifying the demand for skills and training
- Nationwide evaluation of the demand for skills
attempted by the National Labor Research
Institute. Relying on macro data from the
national statistics and drawing from the
tendencies to date, both at macro-economic level
as well as on the labor market and using
comparative data from other transition economies,
it tried to identify future demand for skills and
vocational training based on the development
perspectives for different sectors and branches
of the economy. No training providers or
employers perspective has been employed in the
exercise - The exercise undertaken by Dr. Ghinararu as part
of an active employment measures program,
employed by contrast a totally explorative
approach, trying to immerse itself in the reality
of the market, as seen by employers, unions and
training providers. While partial in itself it
nevertheless revealed the reality of a
dual-economy with different skills and training
demands and drew attention upon the rise of
subsistence farming underemployment
9End of Transition and Preparation for EU
Accession (2001-2004)
- Strong resumption of the economic growth
- Macro stabilization acquired and growth firmly
entrenched - Increasing flow of foreign direct investment and
growth of domestic demand - Credit boom and appreciation of national
currency, increase in real incomes for both
companies and households - Low unemployment and rather strong migration for
employment abroad - NATO Accession (spring 2004), date set for EU
Accession (1st of Jan.2004)
- Second phase of PHARE-VET
- The NATB becomes fully operational (National
Adult Training Board) Commissioning of a series
of studies on both the demand and supply of
vocational training - Elaboration of several pre-accession documents
requiring inputs on the demand for skills and
training (the JAP, the JAP, the NDP 2007-13) - Elaboration of the first alternative
methodological approaches for the identification
of skills and training demand
10Evaluation of the demand for skills and training
in the EU Pre-Accession period
- The Comprehensive nationwide methodological
approach Relying on macro-economic data it
provides forecasts and it attempts to model the
future evolutions on the labor market, using a
set of explanatory variables. Modeling results
are subsequently used to quantify the demand for
skills and training. It complements the purely
quantitative approach with a representative
qualitative research that uses a structured
questionnaire applied on selected companies.
Interviews with major employers might come as an
addition to the approach. Employed by the
National Labor Research Institute in its
evaluation of the skills and training demand for
the West and Centre development regions - The Explorative approach, employed by different
organizations, including the NLRI, which relies
basically only on interviews and questionnaires
as well as occasionally on focus groups with
relevant stakeholders and which attempts at
giving broad directions regarding the demand for
skills and training rather than precise
quantitative assessments
11METHODOLOGY IN A NUTSHELL EVALUATION OF THE
DMAND FOR SKILLS via the ASSESSMENT OF THE
TRAINING SUPPLY
- First nationwide study to b undertaken on the
supply for training and which extracted
information from interviews with 70 training
suppliers commissioned by the NATB (2001) - Gave hints about the demand for skills and
training via information about the market share
and the degree of specialization of the training
providers - The evaluation of the quality of the services
provided, which has been assessed using several
dimensions of the concept, provided information
on their client base as well as on their clients
needs and they way these were addressed - The methodology did not rely on a representative
sample but made use, extensively, of the
background macro-economic and labor market data
against which the results of the questionnaires
have been interpreted. The interpretation was
further formalized by a pseudo-quantitative
approach which revealed correlations in between
the identified characteristics of the training
supply and the known or presumed characteristics
of the demand, thereby validating the research
12METHODOLOGY IN A NUTSHELL NATIONWIDE
COMPREHENSIVE RESEARCH ON THE DEMAND FOR SKILLS
- Employed by the NLRI in its endeavor aimed at
assessing the demand for skills and Vocational
Training in the CENTRE and WEST regions of
Romania (2003-04) commissioned by the Ministry
of Education - Analysis of the current economic and labor market
trends has been undertaken and a model for
forecasting medium and long term evolutions has
been applied Subsequently, this has allowed for
deriving the demand for broad skills based on
the development trends for different sectors and
branches - Further refining came from a questionnaire
applied on a sample of companies, which has been
constructed so as to be representative from the
point of view of the economic structure of the
region Additional information came from in-depth
interviews with managers - Focus groups with stakeholders contributed by
giving the broad guidelines for development,
against which both the forecasts as well as the
results from the explorative research have been
assessed - The approach as such has been adopted by the
Ministry of Education and will be extended
nationwide.
13METHODOLOGY IN A NUTSHELL EXPLORATIVE APPROACHES
AT SECTOR OR REGIONAL LEVEL
- Explorative research on the demand for skills and
training undertaken by the NLRI and the
University of Aarhus (Denmark) commissioned by
the Ministry of Labor, Social Solidarity and
Family (spring 2004) - The study relied on a series of 80 structured
interviews with managers and trade union
leaders/employee representatives in a number of
40 companies, from two fields of activity
(tourism and construction) an two regions (the
NORTH-WEST and the SOUTH WEST) - The number of companies to be surveyed from each
of the two chosen sectors and from each of the
two chosen regions, has been established by using
the shares of the two chosen sectors in the
combined regional employment and of each of the
two regions population in their combined
population - The study, which has been convergent in its
conclusions with the analysis undertaken in 2001
as well as with the conclusions of several other
labor market analyses has been further
complemented and confirmed by a research aiming
at the same topic but targeting as respondents,
representatives of employers associations from
the same fields of activity and regions
14CONCLUSIONS
- -Methods of investigating the demand for skills
and training have evolved apace with the
transition process - As this has been drawing to an end and the
economy has consolidated its stability and growth
trend, the approaches have become more
systematic - The growing domestic demand, expressed by the
increasing disposable incomes of both households
and firms gives a further boost to the training
industry, meanwhile raising its interest in the
identification of the demand for skills, as a way
of improving its services and increasing its
market share - Currently two alternative approaches have
emerged, following several endeavors in the
field, commissioned by relevant stakeholders
and/or public authorities - -One that relies on macro-economic modeling with
its results refined via representative field
research - AND
- -Another, which solely bases its results on
qualitative information, drawn from explorative
studies.